Ask any woman who has given birth and she’ll be happy to wax lyrical about the bad fit between the modern human pelvis and a baby’s big head. Ask any anthropologist and he or she will also be happy to explain, in similar gory detail, that painful labor is the product of an evolutionary compromise to accommodate upright walking in a species that also has an oversized brain. That compromise came, anthropologists used to believe, about 2.4 million years ago when our already bipedal ancestor Homo habilis experienced a huge leap forward in brain size. But a recent announcement in the journal Science of a 1.2 million-year-old Homo erectus pelvis uncovered by University of Indiana paleoanthropologist Sileshi Semaw in the Afar region of Ethiopia in 2001 suggests that painful labor is a relatively modern affliction. The birth canal of that female Homo erectus is, in fact, 30 percent larger than that of the typical modern woman. As a result, Homo erectus birth might have been a relative walk in the park (or on the savanna) compared with today. Those […]
Saturday, November 22nd, 2008
Painful Labor: A Modern Thing
Author: MEREDITH SMALL
Source: LiveScience
Publication Date: 21 November 2008 11:47 am ET
Link: Painful Labor: A Modern Thing
Source: LiveScience
Publication Date: 21 November 2008 11:47 am ET
Link: Painful Labor: A Modern Thing
Stephan: Meredith F. Small is an anthropologist at Cornell University and is also the author of 'Our Babies, Ourselves; How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Parent' and 'The Culture of Our Discontent; Beyond the Medical Model of Mental Illness.' Her Human Nature column appears each Friday on LiveScience.